Stars made in outflows may populate the stellar halo of the Milky Way
Sijie Yu, James S. Bullock, Andrew Wetzel, Robyn E. Sanderson, Andrew, S. Graus, Michael Boylan-Kolchin, Anna M. Nierenberg, Michael Y. Grudi\'c,, Philip F. Hopkins, Du\v{s}an Kere\v{s}, Claude-Andr\'e Faucher-Gigu\`ere

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to show that a significant portion of the Milky Way's stellar halo may originate from stars formed in outflows, offering new insights into galaxy formation and feedback processes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that stars formed in galactic outflows can significantly contribute to the stellar halo, a novel perspective contrasting traditional in-fall models.
Findings
Up to 40% of outer halo stars are from outflows.
Outflow stars are more metal-rich and alpha-enhanced.
Approximately 10% of local halo stars are outflow-born.
Abstract
We study stellar-halo formation using six Milky Way-mass galaxies in FIRE-2 cosmological zoom simulations. We find that of the outer ( kpc) stellar halo in each system consists of stars that were born in outflows from the main galaxy. Outflow stars originate from gas accelerated by super-bubble winds, which can be compressed, cool, and form co-moving stars. The majority of these stars remain bound to the halo and fall back with orbital properties similar to the rest of the stellar halo at .In the outer halo, outflow stars are more spatially homogeneous, metal rich, and alpha-element-enhanced than the accreted stellar halo. At the solar location, up to of our kinematically-identified halo stars were born in outflows; the fraction rises to as high as for the most metal-rich local halo stars ([Fe/H] ). We conclude…
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